Takes less time cruising at 140+ to get from A to B than 110.Chris OFarrell wrote:I completly fail to see at least in THIS country why you would need a car with any ability to go faster then say 140 KPH (110 KPM with some exceptions in the NT). It gives you 30 KMH over the speed limit which is really all you could realisticly need to overtake someone who might be doing a small fraction under the limit or something.
0-100 in ten seconds is considered slow and in a car that has that type of performance, good luck should you need to accelerate quick enough out of danger or take a gap in busy traffic.Chris OFarrell wrote: We also have far too many cars with acceleration power WAY out of where you need it to be. The ability to go from 0 to 100 in ten seconds is NOT a constitutionaly protected right over here, but people cry on like it is. Frankly I think people who have only been driving for a few years SHOULDN'T be allowed to drive certian types of cars, period.
That last part is a bit of a generalisation don't you think?Chris OFarrell wrote: I am seriously sick to death of P plate wearing (as in first second or third year on a licence) WRX's screaming from a standing start to 70 in a 50 zone from a red light just to show they can to everyone around them they can. They walk in, get their licence by driving oh so sedatly, then after getting the new plastic they'll fucking go and do burnouts on the way home.
You don't drive FOR them, you drive AMONGST them. I personally prefer to drive AWAY from themChris OFarrell wrote: It really is a case of taking it on a country by country basis. In Australia, I completly fail to see any need for cars that can do 200KPH or accelerate like something that should be on a race track, ESPECIALY in the hands of young hotheads without experience. What people forget when they start screaming 'IT'S MY RIGHT TO BUY WHATEVER CAR I WANT' is that THEY are not the ONLY people on the road. When you drive, you drive for everyone else on the road.
I also fail to see why the potentiality of something bothers you so much when in reality that potential is rarely used and when it IS used, accidents are relatively rare as a result of the abuse of that potential i.e wrong place, wrong time, wrong conditions etc.
There's also a point I'd like to make regarding experience. I'd wager that a keen young driver who approaches the skill of driving as though it is something to excel at (car control, reading traffic, understanding the laws of physics to a practical degree in relations to automotive mechanics etc) and possesses a little bit of self discipline, is a far better driver than the average 40+ person who merely see's driving as a chore to get from A to B. Difference? One actively LEARNS from the experience, analysises it and improves his skills whereas the other doesn't give a toss.